over-tolerance









over-tolerance


noun

  1. a fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward those whose opinions, beliefs, practices, racial or ethnic origins, etc., differ from one’s own; freedom from bigotry.
  2. a fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward opinions, beliefs, and practices that differ from one’s own.
  3. interest in and concern for ideas, opinions, practices, etc., foreign to one’s own; a liberal, undogmatic viewpoint.
  4. the act or capacity of enduring; endurance: My tolerance of noise is limited.
  5. Medicine/Medical, Immunology.
    1. the power of enduring or resisting the action of a drug, poison, etc.: a tolerance to antibiotics.
    2. the lack of or low levels of immune response to transplanted tissue or other foreign substance that is normally immunogenic.
  6. Machinery.
    1. the permissible range of variation in a dimension of an object.Compare allowance(def 8).
    2. the permissible variation of an object or objects in some characteristic such as hardness, weight, or quantity.
  7. Also called allowance. Coining. a permissible deviation in the fineness and weight of coin, owing to the difficulty of securing exact conformity to the standard prescribed by law.

noun

  1. the state or quality of being tolerant
  2. capacity to endure something, esp pain or hardship
  3. the permitted variation in some measurement or other characteristic of an object or workpiece
  4. physiol the capacity of an organism to endure the effects of a poison or other substance, esp after it has been taken over a prolonged period

n.early 15c., “endurance, fortitude,” from Old French tolerance (14c.), from Latin tolerantia “endurance,” from tolerans, present participle of tolerare “to bear, endure, tolerate” (see toleration). Of authorities, in the sense of “permissive,” first recorded 1530s; of individuals, with the sense of “free from bigotry or severity,” 1765. Meaning “allowable amount of variation” dates from 1868; and physiological sense of “ability to take large doses” first recorded 1875. n.

  1. Decreased responsiveness to a stimulus, especially over a period of continued exposure.
  2. The capacity to absorb a drug continuously or in large doses without adverse effect; diminution in the response to a drug after prolonged use.
  3. Physiological resistance to a poison.
  4. Acceptance of a tissue graft or transplant without immunological rejection.
  5. Unresponsiveness to an antigen that normally produces an immunological reaction.
  6. The ability of an organism to resist or survive infection by a parasitic or pathogenic organism.
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